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Olympics-Swimming-Swedish swimmer out of Olympic marathon in Seine; organisers firmly insist water is safe

Swedish marathon swimmer Victor Johansson has actually pulled out of the Olympic guys's 10km occasion set up for Friday citing concerns about the water quality of the Seine river, Swedish paper Dagens Nyheter reported.

Both Paris 2024 organisers and World Aquatics ensured the water quality satisfied the thresholds set by the sport's governing body.

Johansson informed the paper triathletes had fallen ill after swimming in the urban river throughout the Olympic competitors, without naming any.

There is a lot of info that has been flying around, however what we understand for sure is that individuals have actually ended up being ill, the paper quoted him as saying.

So even though the levels (of E.coli bacteria) have decreased, it didn't feel excellent to start.

The triathletes were in the Seine for about 20 minutes, and regardless of the brief time, some got ill, Johansson included.

Paris 2024, together with World Aquatics, has actually put in location a strenuous water quality monitoring process, Games organisers said in a declaration to Reuters.

Today's results were considered 'very good' according to the World Aquatics thresholds for E.coli and Enterococci on all 4 screening points across the marathon swimming course.

World Aquatics in a declaration added: The males's marathon swim will just occur after analysis of the latest water quality readings over night.

We are very positive that the water quality will stay great and that the race will be able to proceed.

Swedish media reported that the country's triathlete Tilda Mansson fell ill and was throwing up a few days after completing in the ladies's event on July 31, though the group did not validate there was a connection with the Seine water.

We need to remain in the water for 2 hours, said 25-year-old Johansson.

You swallow anywhere from 0 to 250 millilitres (8.45 fluid ounces) of water per hour, so at worst I would have been able to turn up from the Seine with half litre of water.

Swedish Olympic Committee doctor Lykke Tamm stated Johansson had dialogue with the medical team which backed his decision not to swim.

We totally support Victor's decision not to get involved, Tamm said in a declaration.

After cautious factor to consider of all the aspects surrounding Victor, my recommendation is that he needs to not swim in the Seine as it stands now. Health is constantly essential.

The Netherlands' Sharon van Rouwendaal won the ladies's 10km event earlier on Thursday, saying she had actually swallowed a few of the Seine water during her swim but was fine about an hour after the race.

The ladies's occasion went ahead as set up after organisers said the water quality had satisfied appropriate thresholds.

French authorities spent 1.4 billion euros ($1.5 billion) on upgrading the city's sewage systems, guaranteeing the river would be tidy for homeowners to swim in by next summer.

Nevertheless, water quality concerns proved a headache during the triathlon events, with familiarisation sessions cancelled and the males's race postponed by 24 hours.

(source: Reuters)